Jose de Venecia, Jr.
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| colspan="2" style="text-align: cenmter;" Image:Replace this image male.svg | |
| 1992–1998, 2001–incumbent | |
| of Pangasinan 1987–1998, 2001-incumbent | |
| 1969-1972 | |
| Political Party: | Lakas-Christian Muslim Democrats |
|---|---|
| Born: | December 26, 1936 (age 70) Dagupan City, Pangasinan |
| Spouse: | Georgina Vera-Perez |
José Clavería de Venecia, Jr. also known as JDV or Joe De V (born December 26, 1936) is the Speaker of the House of Representatives and fourth highest ranking official of the Philippines. He is the current president of the Philippine's dominant party, LAKAS-CMD. He ran for president in the 1998 election but lost to Vice President Joseph Estrada, finishing second among 11 candidates.
He represents the 4th District of Pangasinan and served as Speaker of the Philippine House of Representatives in the 9th (1992-1995), 10th (1995-1998), 12th (2001-2004), and 13th (2004-2007) Philippine Congress, and is again serving for the 14th (2007-2010) Philippine Congress. He is the first Filipino who has held the Speakership five times in separate terms.
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[edit] Early life and career
De Venecia was born in Dagupan City, Pangasinan to Judge Jose R. de Venecia, Sr., and Casimira Villamil Clavería. In 1947, he finished his elementary studies at the Dagupan Elementary School where he was accelerated by one year. Then in 1951, he completed his secondary education at the De La Salle College High School. He graduated with a degree of Bachelor of Science in Journalism at the Ateneo de Manila in 1955.
As an entrepreneur, de Venecia pioneered overseas contract work for Filipinos where he was one the first Philippine prime contractor in the Middle East and the North Africa in the mid-1970s. He hired 51,000 Filipinos for his companies and engaged in port operations in Saudi Arabia, agriculture in Africa, and mass housing and oil exploration in the United Arab Emirates. His Middle East initiative was followed and later led to the employment of millions of Filipinos. In the 1970s, he was initiated an oil and gas exploration program that led to the first oil and gas strikes in offshore Palawan. He was elected president of the Petroleum Association of the Philippines.
De Venecia was a diplomat as Minister-Economic Counselor from 1966 to 1969. He conceived and implemented the historic dollar-remittance program for overseas Filipino workers worldwide.
Guillermo de Venecia with her wife and seven children: Jose, Sr., Policronio, Zosimo, Alberto, Felipe, Paz and Guillermina.
[edit] Entry to politics
De Venecia came from an influential political family. His grandfather, Guillermo de Venecia was the municipal president (now known as mayor) from 1916 to 1918 and from 1925 to 1926. He ran and won as congressman of the second district of Pangasinan from 1969 to 1972. After the restoration of the House of Representatives in 1987, he ran and won as congressman of the fourth district of Pangasinan.
He was reelected in 1992 and joined a newly created party Lakas Tao of President Fidel Ramos. He initiated the move to unite the National Union of Christian Democrats, a cluster of the Progressive Party of the Philippines and the Union of Muslim Democrats to Lakas Tao to make it a dominant party. At the same year, he was elected Speaker of the House of Representatives. Since Ramos got a low plurality in the elections, De Venecia created a Rainbow Coalition, converging political parties that include the LDP, NPC, Lakas NUCD, and other minor parties to make a solid majority in the House. He was reelected as congressman and Speaker in 1995.
[edit] Peace Envoy
As Ramos’ peace envoy, Speaker de Venecia reached out to insurgent groups Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) secessionists in Mindanao, the RAM-SFP-YOU military rebels, and the Communist Party of the Philippines which operates the New People’s Army (NPA). He crossed the Africa’s Sahara Desert twice to meet the Libyan President Muammar Qaddafi and MNLF Chairman Nur Misuari and assisted in forging a peace agreement at Tripoli in 1976. His persuasion to Misuari to accept autonomy led to the signing of the peace pact in September 2, 1996.
In 1992, de Venecia began secret talks with leaders of the military rebels, led by Commodore Calajate, Gen. Abenina, and Col. Honasan, which led to a ceasefire in December of that year and a final peace agreement in 1995. In April 1997, De Venecia journeyed to the Netherlands to meet with self-exiled leaders of the National Democratic Front and New People’s Army led by Jose Maria Sison and Luis Jalandoni. He was the first Christian leader to enter Mindanao’s Camp Abubakar mountains in November 1997 and open breakthrough peace negotiations with Hashim Salamat, Chairman of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), and military Commander Murad.
[edit] 1998 presidential election
- See also: Philippine general election, 1998
In 1998, the dominant party Lakas-NUCD-UMDP held a convention to select Ramos' successor as titular president and candidate for the May 11 election. A long list of candidates was trimmed and led to a choice between de Venecia and then National Defense Secretary Renato de Villa. Though De Villa was seem as the frontrunner, De Venecia won the convention vote and De Villa bolted the party to form a new one called Partido Reporma.
De Venecia garnered the 2nd highest number of votes in a field of 11 candidates, though he was far behind the winner, Joseph Estrada. After he lost his bid, he departed from media attention and political limelight. In one of his interviews, De Venecia said that he was depressed and took several months to recover.
[edit] Reentry to the politics
De Venecia reemerged on New Year's Day of 2001 calling for a smooth transition of power to the Vice President. Estrada belittled de Venecia's statements, however, he was ousted January 20 of that year. In the 2001 election, he won without opposition as congressman of the 4th district of Pangasinan. He was reelected overwhelmingly by the house including some of the critical left-wing partylist representatives. In 2003, he received an unexpected high commendation from the public when he accepted the Supreme Court ruling that junked the petition for the impeachment of the Chief Justice. [1] In the 2004 election, he became instrumental for Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's victory as president. He also won by a landslide as congressman and he was reelected as Speaker for the fourth time.
On July 10, 2007, De Venecia's supporters opposed secret balloting by the majority coalition to select the speaker of the House of Representatives in the Fourteenth Congress. Rep. Eduardo Zialcita of Parañaque, said the House is not a “secret society.” [2] Meanwhile, Sorsogon Rep. Jose Solis accused De Venecia, Jr.'s son, Jose de Venecia III for questioning a $330 million broadband connection deal between the Philippine government and Chinese firm ZTE. Solis hit De Venecia III for desiring to have his Amsterdam Holdings, Inc. (AHI) get the deal (which will connect national government agencies to local government units through the Internet and save government up to P3 billion in telephone expenses every year). Solis further claimed that AHI is a "veritable mom’s-and-pop’s enterprise with a reported paid-up capital of only P650,000. How can AHI possibly undertake this project when it may not even have enough funds to run a mini grocery?” [3]
[edit] Speaker for the 5th Time
On July 23, 2007, 159 lawmakers picked De Venecia House Speaker for 5th time -- after the House commenced at 2:17 pm a roll-call vote for the position. De Venecia was the lone nominee, while his opponent, Cebu Rep. Pablo Garcia, was not nominated. Iloilo Rep. Arthur Defensor was elected Majority Leader while San Juan Rep. Ronaldo Zamora was elected minority leader. The 14th Congress of the House of Representatives is composed of 240 lawmakers, 21 of whom are party-list representatives. [4] [5]
[edit] Personal life
- De Venecia married Victoria Perez and had 4 children: Alexandra (Sandra), Leslie, Vivian, and Jose III (Joey). Their marriage, however, ended in a divorce, and Perez now lives in Albany, New York. He later married Georgina Vera-Perez, daughter of Filipino classic film producer Jose Vera Perez. They have two children: Christopher and Kristina Cassandra (KC). Georgina, also known as Manay Gina, was previously married to construction manager Felipe Cruz with whom she had 2 children. She is currently a social worker and a radio host. She used to host a TV drama series.
- Jose de Venecia III, a son of Speaker Jose de Venecia Jr. (born in 1963) co-founder of Amsterdam Holdings Inc. (AHI), a proponent of the National Broadband Network project.
[edit] Blazing Fire at Home
On December 17, 2004, de Venecia's house in Dasmariñas Village caught fire. His 16-year-old daughter KC was trapped inside and died of suffocation. KC's body was recovered in a bathtub (see [6]). None of the de Venecia family's belongings were recovered. De Venecia was forced to borrow clothes and shoes from other members of the House of Representatives of the 13th Congress and reside in a nearby hotel. KC's remains were cremated and her ashes were buried at the Sanctuario de San Antonio chapel.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- The biography of Jose de Venecia Jr.
- The official website of Jose de Venecia Jr.
- The official website of the Philippine House of Representatives
| Preceded by Ramon V. Mitra | Speaker of the House of Representatives 1992–1998 | Succeeded by Manny Villar |
| Preceded by Feliciano Belmonte, Jr. | Speaker of the House of Representatives 2001–present | Succeeded by Incumbent |
Speakers of the Philippine House of Representatives |
|---|
| Osmeña • Roxas • Paredes • Montilla • Yulo • Aquino • Zulueta • Perez • Laurel • Romualdez • Villareal • Laurel • Villareal • Makalintal • Yñiguez • Mitra • de Venecia • Villar • Fuentebella • Belmonte • de Venecia |

